Date: Sat, 13 Jan 2007 14:56:02 -0800 From: Doug Barton <dougb@FreeBSD.org> To: Andrew Pantyukhin <infofarmer@FreeBSD.org> Cc: FreeBSD Ports <ports@freebsd.org>, Robert Huff <roberthuff@rcn.com> Subject: Re: Restricting (human) language and character set in /usr/ports Message-ID: <45A96382.3040407@FreeBSD.org> In-Reply-To: <cb5206420701131339s66f2b3f9s2924a55c429ef501@mail.gmail.com> References: <cb5206420701131101l21807993ld15c899e6754ec02@mail.gmail.com> <17833.15710.478810.6251@jerusalem.litteratus.org> <cb5206420701131339s66f2b3f9s2924a55c429ef501@mail.gmail.com>
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Andrew Pantyukhin wrote: > On 1/13/07, Robert Huff <roberthuff@rcn.com> wrote: >> >> Andrew Pantyukhin writes: >> >> > I'm not sure if there's a policy already, but it seems >> > we have discussed this before. >> > >> > Can we limit /usr/ports (the whole ports collection) to >> > English language and ASCII characters? This restriction >> > should probably apply to all text data (with possible >> > exception for patches). >> >> I don't follow this issue (much), so could you explain what's >> broken about the /status quo/? > > It depends on what you mean by /status quo/, but in > short, when I look at COMMENT, pkg-descr, pkg-message, > comments in Makefile and other such text data, I > expect to see English language and ASCII characters. > > There are ports that don't follow this expectation and > I'd like to change that. I'm not sure it's quite so cut and dry as that. For example, I think it's probably reasonable for the /usr/ports/<language> ports to have some non-ascii stuff to start with. Is there a problem you're trying to solve here, or is this just a matter of tidying things up a bit? Doug -- This .signature sanitized for your protection
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